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Bad Wi-Fi Coverage And How To Fix It

Let’s look at some of the common Wi-Fi killers, and how to best them.

Home Construction and Other Obstructions

The way your home is built has likely the most direct impact on how far Wi-Fi can penetrate the house. The vast majority of homes were built before the concepts of mobile phones, 3G service and Wi-Fi were discussed outside of Nikola Tesla reading groups.

Steel structures, concrete, the layout of air-conditioning vents and returns in homes with centralised systems, aquariums, and the spot where your dog chooses to nap can all make an impact on your Wi-Fi coverage. One big signal killer could also be lurking in your walls, especially if your house dates back more than 60 years: chicken wire. Seriously.

As the Wall Street Journal explains, many homes with plaster and lath walls were held up by wood wrapped in chicken wire. When modern homeowners try to live the wireless life, they find terrible Wi-Fi coverage, because the wire is spaced in just such a way to create a perfect shield against Wi-Fi frequencies (sometimes called a Farraday cage. Image via Nanimo.

You can move your aquariums and re-position your router to provide better, more centralised coverage — more on that down below. But you’re likely not going to gut your walls to fix your wireless, so let’s eliminate other potential culprits.

Interference from Neighbours (and Other Gadgets)

Most home users buy just a few varieties of routers made for the residential market. Most users also never tweak their settings, and most routers default to the same channel. If you see a good number of Wi-Fi names available from your laptop, or you suspect you might have bad luck in your neighbours’ placement, it’s time to switch channels.

The web-based Meraki Wi-Fi Stumbler is a good bet for analysing your network to find the least-used channel nearby — when it’s up. On Windows, you can also try inSSIDer, and Mac users can work through iStumbler. With an Android phone, you can walk around your house and see which channel is getting traffic, and where, with Wifi Analyzer.

Poor Placement

You placed your wireless router on the floor, right behind the TV and the home theatre receiver, downstairs in the corner living room, because that’s where the cable guy put it. He’s wrong, but the fix might be far more simple than you thought.

For the best possible placement of your router, use the VOICE acronym. We’ve adapted that simplification of the excellent CountryMile WiFi guide to improving reception to a five-item checklist.

Has its antenna pointing in Vertical fashion. The Wi-Fi signal actually beams out from the sides of your antenna, and if they’re pointing in a direction other than up, you might get slightly better coverage in one particular area — but most of your signal is shooting straight into the ground and ceiling. Image via CountryMile WiFi.

Is free from Obstructions, so that it’s not right next to a thick wall, close to other electronics, angled behind metal objects or otherwise blocked from a line of coverage.

Is away from, and working on a different channel from, Interference from neighbours.

Has a Central position in your house, so its coverage is as even and wide-ranging as possible.

Is Elevated, because Wi-Fi signal has an easier time travelling down and sideways than up. It’s actually OK to elevate your router onto a dresser, entertainment shelter, shelf or even stacked on a few books. Wi-Fi signal has little trouble passing through wood and books, as opposed to other issues.

Not Enough Power

If your Wi-Fi signal is dead just outside the room it’s in, you’ve got structural issues that you’ll likely have to address, or you’ll need to invest in some serious CAT cabling throughout your house. If it feels like you’re always just on the verge of having signal, you can likely give your wireless router a little boost to fill that remaining gap.

We’ve come across many ways to boost the power and extend your signal area. Here are the majority of them:

Improve reception at a particular spot in your house with a cooking strainer signal catcher

Use a shoebox and tinfoil for an ugly-but-effective extender.

Repeat the Signal

Some people are just unlucky in their net connections. Maybe the cable only comes in from one spot in your house, a lower corner, and your walls and ducts aren’t particularly amenable to running cable. Or your spouse won’t put up with having the Linksys box so high up and visible in the spot you need it. In either case, you can form a kind of wireless signal bucket brigade with a bridge or repeater: a second router that picks up the signal from your primary router, then re-broadcasts it to cover another area of your house.